| Global Investment Surges in Green Ammonia Research and Development 
 By  Felicity Bradstock - Jun 03, 2024, 3:00 PM CDT
 
 Green ammonia is produced using renewable energy, green hydrogen,  and nitrogen from the air, making it more environmentally friendly than  brown ammonia.Several hard-to-abate industries, such as shipping and  manufacturing, are considering green ammonia as a potential fuel to  reduce carbon emissions.Countries like Oman, Norway, and Chile are among those heavily investing in the expansion of their green ammonia industries.
 
   
 
 Green ammonia is gaining in popularity as an alternative renewable  energy source that can be used in fertilisers, as well as potentially  for industry and shipping. An increase in the production of green  ammonia could help several hard-to-abate industries decarbonise  operations in line with a global green transition. Several countries  around the globe are now investing heavily in research and development,  to explore different applications, scale up production and reduce the  costs associated with green ammonia production.
 
 Ammonia is produced by  combining hydrogen and nitrogen using the Haber-Bosch process.  This creates brown ammonia and releases carbon emissions. By contrast,  green ammonia is produced using renewable energy, green hydrogen, and  nitrogen from the air. It is more expensive to produce but much more  environmentally friendly, massively reducing the quantity of carbon  emissions associated with production. Further, the process is not  reliant on natural gas.
 
 Around  70 percent of  the ammonia produced worldwide is used in fertilisers, while the rest  is used in industrial applications, such as in the production of  plastics, explosives, and synthetic fibres. The demand for ammonia is  expected to increase significantly in the future, in line with  population growth and greater industrialisation. Companies are,  therefore, aiming to produce more green ammonia in response to  government pressure to support a green transition through  decarbonisation.
 
 Many companies are looking to green ammonia as a  potential sustainable fuel for the shipping sector, which is considered  extremely difficult to decarbonise. As ammonia is  easier and cheaper to store and transport than hydrogen,  governments and private companies have been investing heavily in the  sector in recent years to support decarbonisation efforts. Ammonia may  also offer a long-term solution for storing and transporting renewable  energy. However, the production scale remains small, with greater  investment required for both research and development, as well as  scaling up production.
 
 Several countries around the globe are expanding their green  ammonia sectors in a bid to become major hubs of the clean energy  sources. In the Middle East, Oman will support the Norwegian company  Yara and the Indian renewable energy company Acme with their green  ammonia plans. Acme will begin producing green ammonia in Oman at its  planned 900,000 tonnes-per-year plant starting in 2027. The company will  use solar energy to power the production process supported by Oman’s  favourable renewable energy conditions.
 
 Magnus Ankarstrand, the President of Yara Clean Ammonia,  stated,  “Yara Clean Ammonia is a frontrunner in enabling the hydrogen economy  across the shipping, food, power, and industrial sectors. The renewable  ammonia from Oman will be part of our scalable distribution system,  developing a reliable, safe, and cost-efficient supply chain for  low-emission ammonia across different market segments. This agreement  demonstrates the power of partnerships and collaboration to develop  value chains that reduce emissions.”
 
 In Europe, Norway is  developing its green ammonia market. The renewable energy company  Fortescue is currently constructing a project off the coast of the  Nordgulen fjord in the western part of Norway consisting of a 300 MW  hydrogen production facility; a green ammonia synthesis plant with a  nominal capacity of 675 tonnes per day; facilities for ammonia storage,  water treatment and marine infrastructure; an import-export port and a  water subsea pipeline. Fortescue was awarded  $221 million by the EU in  2023 to support the development of the project. The new ammonia plant  will be powered using surplus renewable energy from Norway’s grid, with  Fortescue planning to ship green ammonia to domestic and European  markets.
 
 In Latin America, Chile has big plans for its green hydrogen  sector, and it is now looking towards green ammonia production. One  project currently under consideration is the $2.5-billion Volta green  ammonia project, which has been proposed by the developer MAE. The  company hopes to construct the facility in the Mejillones industrial  zone in the northern region of Antofagasta. If approved, the plant could  have a capacity of 620,000 tonnes per year of green ammonia, with power  being produced by a 600 MW solar PV plant with battery storage.
 
 The CEO of MAE Gonzalo Moyano explained the company’s reasons for choosing Mejillones for the development,  stating:  “Antofagasta, and especially Mejillones, has favourable conditions for  the development of projects of these characteristics.” Moyano added,  “Atacama desert is the place with the highest solar irradiance on the  planet, which positions it as one of the best places for the production  of green hydrogen and its derivatives… Likewise, Mejillones already has  infrastructure, such as roads, electrical transmission infrastructure, a  desalinated water network and the port infrastructure necessary to  unload the equipment needed for the construction of the plant and to  market the product.”
 
 Several countries are investing in the  expansion of their green ammonia industries in an attempt to diversify  their clean energy mix. Green ammonia has a wide application potential,  with many hoping to use the sustainable fuel to help decarbonise  hard-to-abate industries, such as shipping and manufacturing. However,  greater investment is required to develop production technologies to  both reduce costs and scale up production.
 
 By Felicity Bradstock for Oilprice.com
 
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